Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

Disagree Ed. Saying things like that dont come into peoples mind who arent racist. Saying it alone makes you racist, let alone with the intention to hurt. Hes scum, utter scum and how Chelsea have dealt with it is shocking.

Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

Dermo wrote:

Disagree Ed. Saying things like that dont come into peoples mind who arent racist. Saying it alone makes you racist, let alone with the intention to hurt. Hes scum, utter scum and how Chelsea have dealt with it is shocking.

In the heat of the moment it does and when you're not intelligent enough to find something else equally as hurtful.

Agreed, utter disgrace how we've dealt with it, embarrassing. No apology, no admittance of guilt, disgusting. I'd have shown him the door.

Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

smallman1 wrote:

I don't think he is a racist, it was a heat of the moment comment designed to hurt Anton as much as possible.

Do you really believe this? Watch the footage and judge whether it was really said to "hurt Ferdinand as much as possible". Terry is turning his head away as hes saying it and it wasn't loud enough for anyone to hear let alone Ferdinand who was 20 metres away.

Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

pfffffffffffffffft! /\

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.Martin Luther KingLegs are very frickin important parts of the woman, thin ankle and tense bop is a must.MateGreen

Re: So Jimmy Saville WAS noncing kids.

Children as young as eight were abused by Jimmy Savile, a report detailing 50 years of allegations has revealed.

The Metropolitan Police and the NSPCC report also added Wheatfields Hospice in Leeds to the list of places where the former TV presenter abused girls.

Some 214 crimes were recorded across 28 police force areas, including 34 of rape or penetration, police said.

They say the accounts are a "compelling picture of widespread sexual abuse by a predatory sex offender".

Revelations that Savile had sexually abused girls prompted hundreds of other victims to come forward, including those who said they were attacked on BBC premises.

The former presenter and BBC Radio 1 DJ died aged 84 in October 2011, a year before the allegations emerged in an ITV documentary.

Historical abuseFriday's report, Giving Victims a Voice, sets out what Scotland Yard and the NSPCC have discovered about Savile since they launched the inquiry - Operation Yewtree - three months ago.

The 30-page document expands on allegations that Savile was a prolific sex offender whose abuse took place at a number of institutions identified by victims.

Its findings included:

Savile offended at 13 hospitals, including Great Ormond Street in London, and one offence was recorded at Wheatfields Hospice in Leeds in 1977His youngest victim was eight and the oldest was 47The earliest allegation is from 1955 in ManchesterThe last allegation was made in 2009Offences were carried out at the BBC between 1965 and 2006 - including at the last BBC Top of the Pops recordingPeak offending took place between 1966 and 1976Some 73% of victims were under 18Offences were committed at the BBC, including Television Centre in west London where the children's programme Jim'll Fix It was recorded, Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Leeds General Infirmary and Broadmoor high-security psychiatric prison surfaced earlier this year.

Savile has also been linked to abuse at the Jersey children's home, Haut de la Garenne, and the Duncroft Approved School in Surrey.

The Crown Prosecution Service has also published a review of a decision in 2009 not to charge Savile with sexual offences in relation to four complaints made to police in Surrey and Sussex.

It found there was "nothing to suggest" the decisions were "consciously influenced by any improper motive on the part of either the police or prosecutors".

However, it said further action might have been possible had "police and prosecutors taken a different approach," adding the CPS prosecutor "did not probe... or seek to build a prosecution".

If those coming forward had "been told that she was not the only woman to have complained, they would probably have been prepared to give evidence".

Director of public prosecutions, Kier Starmer, apologised on behalf of the CPS. He said the report represented a "watershed moment" and pledged to enhance information sharing and provide prosecutors with additional training for the future.